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Slorwich Gulletin and Goufief. 116 YEARS OLD, Lntered at the Postofice at Neswioh, LCodi., as second-cluss matier, Telephono Callss Bulletin Business Office, 48! Bulletin ;&wrhl Eooma. h-l Bulletin Job Office, 35-6, Willhwantte Office, Room 3 Murray Telephone 310. Aug. 19, 1912, Have The Bulletin Follow You Readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seashore, moun- tains, rural resorts or for Europe may keep in touch with doings in town by having The Bulletin sent direct to them by mail for any period desired — days, weeks of months. Hundreds follow this plan on their annual vacation and returs fully informed as to what has been going on during their absence. Urders should be placed with The Bulletin business office. WELCOME THE ROQUE PLAYERS. This is the week of the year when Norwich welcomes to its circles the expert roque players of the country and their friends. For practically bree decades the Rose of New Eng- and has been entertaining the leading players of this scientific game, which ittracts by its merits some of the best men of the country. It means an as- y of gentlemen of which any city be proud to be the host, and the enthusiasts in a4 national tournament wherein honor is the chief factor in 16 observance of the rules of the gAme ion ‘vastly and thank- ful from the disgusting wranglings which characterize many ntests of national moment. Roque is not so well known under hat name as the one from which it the elimination of the t 1 ¢ croquet. It entifically played was derived b niti s the same gam: al and n a sanded and rolled dirt court with wber or cement borders and permits ¢ skill nd only to that required v a game of billiards. The game has such a large number of followers as most sports which have a national ssoclation, but it is by no means con- ined to any one section. There are »ig centers such s Philadelphia, Springfield and Washington, while seattered throughout New England and at many points from one ocean o tha other many admirers and play- ers are to be found. Norwich attracts because of its fine location and its good and cool climate, which even in August is a wonderful improvement over the big cities. Nor- wich should encourage the national gathering here in every way possible. It 1eans a big advertisement for the city; and national organization, which nows no home bhut the Rose of New I nd, should be made to feel more d fnore welcome as its age increases. welcome b all former attend- ants and as many more he time and have the inc spend the week on the local courts. GUARDING THE COUNTRY’S TERESTS. t is quite apparent that congress Is #0 anxious to adjourn that it is in- elined to pass most any kind of legis- lation in order to get through and get IN- away from Washington. In doing so, they are calling forth veto after veto from the president, and are in his eto messages geiting a strong state- ment of the facts which they already know stand out against the enactment f such measures they have en- cavored through, Without rd to exhaustive reports and in- igations on the subjects handled, he president has had to be the safety alve for the lawmaking body, He has shown that he is guarding the best in- terests of the country and determined as to push that le m looking to amy other end # upon the shoulders of mgress rather than upon his, President Taft has also taken a firm stand against the placing of riders in mportant bills. This method of load- ing down measures which are vital, with matters which, if taken up sep- arately, would likely be defeated, has become (oo commen. It is an im- preper way 1o enact laws and the law- makers realize it from the fact that they will make no effort to pass the riders as separate bills. serlous be decide Riders are so cent al the first glance, but onsideration shows them to 3 ngerous, and there can- t be too much discouragement giv- 0 congress in attempting to pass 5 matters. Fvery matter should have full and free discussion, which oes not get obscured in important IN DESPERATE STRAITS. was only a few weeks ago, it will recalled, so vehemently was uttered, that the Roosevelt backers were crying out against the alliances between the Taft forces and such men 2s Lorimer, and, in fact, Lorimer him- 1 be easily self, It was made to appear that that alone was sufficient to blacken any candidate, though it was perfectly well known at the time that President Taft was not for Lorimer. Now comes the surprising statement from the Chicago Tribune, the paper of Medill MeCormick, one of the strongest sup- rorters of Roosevelt, which declares that an alliance iz being formed be- tween the Roosevelt supporters in that state and the Lorimer machine. It “That such an alliance is being formed, or is aimed at, seems beyond doubt. The motive of the republicans wha follow the leadership of Lorimer is revenge on the organization which threw them out. The motive of the progressives who would aceept their aid is gain. The assoclation is not hal- lowed.” This only confirms the opinion which has long existed that the motive of the progressive party is revenge and vie- tory at any cos What is a bad thing for the republican party seems to be all right for the progressive party. It s gathering under its wing all those have a grievance against either the old parties. It was after the rimer expulsion that Roosevelt aimed that he responsible for it. The party with morality and bet- terment of condition for its watche words I8 certainly making an inglori- ous start in its desperate fight for votes. (‘onsistency and sincerity have been comsigned to the obsolete list. says who was The way to Invite political death 1s to deo persistently what the people do not want you to | as a matter of THEIR REGORPS AS EVIBENCE: 1t was with deadly aim that Sena- tor LaFellette fired at the bull meose eandidate in his address before the menate when he deelared fer progress- ivism within the republiean party and polated out that Reeseveit, whose two terms were the meost prelific for the growth of trusts, is net the man to find the way out of the situatien which has resulted from their grasp. For him to declare for federal control or any other means of regulating the trusts, is a joke. Has he ever wished to have checked them the time was when they were forming. During his seven years in office the trusts increased from 149 to 10,020 This doesn’t look very much as if Roosevelt cared whether they were controlled or mot; in fact, their growth unrestricted at ‘just the time when the application of the anti-trust law could have been most effective, is an indi- cation of hig real attitude, when it is coupled with the existing friendliness with the Harvester and Steel trusts. President Taft has applied the law vigorously despite the handicap which his predecessor placed against him. His action has checked the growth of] combinations and inspired faith in the administration. The trust promoting has stopped, and for that reason the trust promoter has gome into politics to get back into power the man who stood by them and permitted their formation and who they calculate will do the same thing again if they can give him the opportuaity, President Taft has shown the peopls how he stands on the trust problem, His determined fight against them and thelr digsolution has not thrown the business of the country into a chaotic condition. To the contrary, it has in- spired faith and equal opportunity and brought the country to a state of pros- perity, in spite of the fact that it is the year of presidential election, such as has not been previously experienced, It 18 plain where the president stands on the trusts, but Roosevelt's actions show that he is trust-controlled, de- spite his words. SUGAR IN NEW ENGLAND. New England has sufficient suita- bla area to produce all the sugar con- sumed in its limits, in the opinion of Truman J. Palmer, secretary of the United States sugar industry. This may seem strange when it is consid- ered that it is far from the section where the sugar cane is grown and its climate is not conducive to such cul- tivation, but it is through the sugar beet that such would be possible, and, fact, it was in New England, at Northampton, Mass., that David lee Child in 1839 received a| medal for the first beet sugar made in America. The beet sugar industry is a fast- growing one. Through the middle it is gaining by leaps and bounds even into the far west is the cultiv tion extending, so that in those sec- tions the farmers look to it for §4 000,000 of their income. In connection with his advo of the growing of sugar beets in ew England, Mr. Palmer naturally sees the opportunity for obliterating the abandoned farms, which are yearly growing less and less, and says that “wherever sugar beets are planted, wornout soils become re- juvenated and fallow and abandoned fields become fertile.” He makes an important suggestion to New England in the agricultural line when he advocates the sugar beet industry, in support of which he says that a thorough study has shown the climate and soil ideal for such cuiture, and points out that with labor at hand to till the farms, and capital and labor at hand for the manufacture of beet sugar, with the market for all that can be produced so near, no better condi- tions could be expected. It's a prop- osition which should reeeive careful consideration. EDITORIAL NOTES. The bull moose platform was made all-inelusive because men of all par- ties are to be lured in Krupp, the peacemaker, made $72.- 000,000 turning out big, intimidating guns to keep nations orderly. The Colonel i still trying to make out that he 18 the choice of the people ~that he heard them calling, The suffragetie leader realizes that money talks when she embiazoned her checks with “Votes for Women.” Happy thought for today: Man | thinks he is looking for justice, but no level-headed man ever yearns for it Kverything is going to be conserved if the bull moose wins; and everything is going to national loses. the dogs if he It is well that steps are being taken to locate the typhoid germ, It is one of the worst diseases that has to be fought. No one will appreciate the termina- tion of the attack on New York more than the fellows who had to do the hiking. Nicholas lLongworth undoubtedly finds it uncomfortable being held re- sponsible for all his father-in-law does, Many a man who feels able of riding two political horses this year | has never yet learned well how to ride one, Any bull mooser will tell you all the republicans of conscience and sense feel just the same toward the G. O, P. that he does. Just think of the intelligent repub- licans who Dpropose to vote against their party because it is so rotten and for it because it is so good! In LaFoliette's opinion Roose doesn’t amount to very much as a progressive. There are many others who carry the same opinion. The workmen of 18 years ago learn- ed what an empty dinner pail was— the workmen of today seem inclined to invite the same experience. ‘When Roosevelt continues to rant at the newspapers for not devoting all their space to him to the exclusion of all other news, he “bites the hand which fed him.” Congress does not appear to know how to do its duty and then break away, An ingenious member is sald to have designed a method for com- pelling adjournment, While the Philadelphla judge is In- vestigating whether it hurts to make a lobster red, he will doubtiess find that tanning a vacatienist Is accompanied by mere or less suffering, HEALTH AND BEAUTY: For ink stains en the fingers try lemen and salt. When the halr splits clip er singe|those of raffla, substituting the mac- the ends. Corng can be remeved by daily rub- bing with a teilet pumice Apples form a geod laxative when eaten on an empty stomach. The style of hairdressing the face, Pineapple juice 18 soothing to the throat and in some cases will cure sore throat. edy. Massaging the scalp will stop falling hair and increase the amount of nat- ural oil. A HAPPY THOUGHT. Among the devices for helping a shut-in this seems the cleverest: One of the wealthy girls in a large town invited twenty of her girl friends to an afternoon tea and proposed a plan which went right to their hearts. She knew of an elderly woman, a bright, cheerful person, who had dearly lov- ed her kind and was interested in the outside world, and who had been shut up in her room through an injury to her hip, What a blessing a telephone would be to her; and it might be put into her reom if each one of the girls would pledge ten cents a month, Of eourse, it was done without delay, ‘The phone was on a table at the in- valid’s elbow and the girls called her up and talked to her a little while ev- ery day and told her the news, and she called up old friends who had al- most forgotten her; and so it was like perpetual fresh air and sunshine in that dull Jittle reom, And it was so easily done, One did not have to be wealthy to do it—one only had to think, or to be told, DICTI'ATES OF FASHION, Swansdown is seen again on charm- ing little shoulder wraps for even- ings. Wraps both for day and evening show a tendency to the three-quarter length. Hats are still rather low on the head, but show more of the hair than formerly. In Paris sleeve frills are very portant; also jabot frills with and revers, im- vests Buttons of crystal, pearl with rims of color and covered molds are still being nsed. alg are a charming jew- Often they are mounted Carved erys €lry novelty. in platinum. Women are once more wearing the old cream tinted Spawish lace for evening scarfs. Embroidered batiste and voile is much used to fashion the large square, round or biblike collars. Some charming little frills are made of black spotted tulle, held together around the neck by a tiny posy of flowers. Buckles are larger and more elab- orate than ever. Almost any amount may be spent on such a small detail as slipper buckles. Charming bandeaux for evening wear are of black velyet run through buckles of brilliants and tied in a flat bow at the side front. BLACK VELVET. The “sweet unreasonableness” of which the poet sings is exemplified by the French modiste who invariably emphas tulle and lace and all filmy fabrics for winter and then introduces velvet, and someimes fur on the summer costume. Fashion's vagaries are inconsistent but beautiful, so why objent ? cls velvet s one of the prime fav- s tod It is used for all types shes and girdles, affording con- ast and giving a slender appearance at the waist line, It is practical on ac- count of its defiance of dust and hard wear, and its ability to. harmonize with all colors is too great to ignore Therefore the black velvet has an ex- se other than beauty for being. oSt noticeable is the use of black velvet a3 facings for hats, The new- est models now show entire undersur- faces of bdlack velvet or wide bands on wire applied with perfeot smooth- ness to the edge of the brim. In this manner the bright color of a hot can be toned down and disasso- ciated, so to speak, from the gown. The black also brings out the bright- nega of the eyes, the whiteness of the skin and is generally becoming. NEEDLEWORK NOTES. Pine pillows should be made of butcher's Jinen. This is to be preferred to the color linens, for the oil in the structive ability, and that Wilson con- fesses to failure of Interpretation of the bull moose platform which would be discreditable to a schoolboy. All is punk but me, Strange as it may seem, Roosevelt does not claim to have originated the progressive idea, but he does admit stealing someone else’s thunder. As if to form a new balance the price of women's hats are going down since beef is at high water mark. The man of the house breathes easier. The tax dodger is a man who pushes over on to his neighbor charges which justly belong to him. It is defined in the dictionary with one short word. e tariff,” says Governor Wilson, “was once a bulwark; now it is a dam.” It isn't so very long since every democratic spellbinder was proving it to be a “Chinese wall”! A bull moose convention contrast: Three lines in the platform favoring tariff, and in the convention a song of praise for Roosevelt, with his name substituted for the Saviour’s, The nation is aw that Taft and the democratic congress are at odds. Taft wants a revision of the tariff that will benefit the people—the democrats want one that will help Wilson's cam- paign. One advocate of the new fifth party holds that the bull moose candidate's electlon would not be his third term. Probably le would date everything following such a calamity as the year one T, R, Multimilllonalre Perkins has con- fessed to Reesevelt that he has jained {him to make a eeuniry in which his children can live and presper, In The Colonel says Taft I8 a dead is- other words, his old high finance would sue, that the soclallsts have no cen- [ make serts of us all, Waoten in Lila'wed 1o the ENthen ] should { envelope shape, with the turned over depend upen the contour or shape of | flap fastened on'the side. To make the For a burn, cover immediately with |this case, and then they will all be butter; it will prove an excellent rem- {at hand and the contents of the en- pine will strike through in time and neeessitate a thereugh washing. A pretty reund bag of macrame may be made in the same manner as rame twine for the raffia and using ex- actly the same knets. This would make a pretty as well as serviceable bag, as all macrame work is durable, A case which would prove a real convenience, especially when traveling with a sultcase, is made in the popular case more roomy a puffing is inserted along the sides and bottom of the case, which permits of the case being packed flat, but increases its capacity. Gloves, handkerchiefs, veils and other small necessities may be slipped into tire suitcase need not be turned over to find some small article. CHERRY CAKE. A good cherry cake is made with one and one-half pounds of gelf-raising flour, eight ounces of caster sugar, tha same amount of butter, four ounces of preserved cherries, four eggs, a little milk and some berry flavoring. Havy- ing creamed the butter and sugar to- gether, stir in the milk and flavoring; then work all into the flour lightly and add the cherries, previously cuf into pieces, and when all the ingredients are Incorporated line some baking tins with buttered paper, put in the mix- ture and bake in a moderate oven. CUPS FOR |CES. Cups of plaited whita paper, ready to use for fces or other frozen des- serts, come in a varlety of sizes. These may be had by the dozen: they are less expenelve when bought in larger quan- tities. I8 a good plan to have a hand for emergen- em a compara- tively little frult or dessert will answer for several persons, so emall an amount does each cup hold. ICED APPLES. Pare and core a half dozen large| applea. Fill with sugar and a little | butter and nutmeg. Bake until nea ly done, TLet cool and remove to an- | other plate, Ice tops and sides with | cake jcing and brown Jightly, Serve with cream. CORN PUDDING. Take six small or four large ears of | it Ia all cut off, This is much nicer| than greting or scraping it, as it is| not so mushy and dees not make the pudding so solid, There should be about two eupfuls of this pulp. Take two egge well beaten, stir in the corn, add a level tablespeonful of butter, three-quarters of a teaspoonful of salt and s dash of pepper. Stir ther- | oughly and graduaily add twe cupfuls of sweet milk, Pour into a pudding| dish and bake three-quarters of an hour in a mederate oven. Serve hot with the meat. GRAPE ICE. Make a syrup with one and one-half pounds of sugar and one pint of ter. Bring it to the boiling point ana pour it while hot over four pounds of ripe grapes which have been mashed to a pulp. Let stand covered for one hour, rub through sieve, add the juice of one lemon and freeze. When partly frozen add the whites of two eggs beaten stiff with two tablespoon- fuls of powdered sugar. Mix in well |and finish freezing. Then pack and set away for two hours. | -t THE COMPASS, ‘With the season for out of door life at its height, the stores are showing | an unusual display of compasses. Some of thees are made so as to suspend from the watch chain or key ring, while others have a cap, giving the | closed compass the appearance of a | metal box, These make excellent gifts |for the person fond of tramping. | Speaking of compasses, with a wat | and sunlight a person can tell the d | rection without the aid of the nfagnetic needle, Place the wateh ge that the hour hand peints directly teward the sun, Half way between that point and the figure 12 will be due south. A LATE SUMMER SUIT. An innovation in the way of summer serge or flannel suit is the one com- posed of a white skirt, but with the natty coat of blue, the white being used only for the collar, cuffs and pocket flaps. A sult of this sort really more practical than ane entirel of white, for it does not soil so easily | and may be worn later in the season. | A suit of this kind seen recently had the skirt finished with a banding of the blue around the bottom, STENCILED TABLE COVERS. Round table covers, or lunch cloths, of the white or natural lnen, come with stenciled designs in various col- Sometimes the square cloths, too, are to be found: thes are finished with a buttonholed scallop or a hem- stitched hem A HANDY SETTLE. One of the plain white wood settles, which s quickly transformed into a table, will serve admirably for an ironing table. In the seat which vir tually 18 & box, may be kept the 1l sary paraphernalia for ironing days. A settle of this sort palnted green is just the thing for the porch. Then the seat serves as a storage place for rub- bers or the children's toys, transformed into a table it will an- swer for the meals eaten in the open. A SHOE CLEANING OUTFIT. A novelty in the form of a shoe box, which folds up, is as practical as it is unique. When closed the outfit resem- by four or five inches in height. TFolded up against the side: of the box are the four iron legs whic: drop into ion on the ing the box the shoes. Inside of the box are all the necessary articles for a good shine, BATHTUB STAINS. Stains of an enamel bathtub may frequently be removed by rubbing on vinegar and salt. They should remain for a moment and then be washed off. Any sort of rough sand soap is bad for a tub, and none but a good laun- | dry variety should be used. Once a week the enamel shouM he gone over with kerosene and then thoroughly washed. WEAK EYES. Tender eves are quite compatible with perfect eyesight, en due to the presence of some const the ravages of measles or other such trouble. When a feeling of sand der the lids or constant irritation present nothing could be better than the usc of the following lotion racic acid one drachm,water si | understanding when the customers fill corn, cut the thinnest pessible, shav-| P30y, 3o ing from the rows of corn on the coh, | 54/ae kind, that ls welling stamps or then a heavier Jayer and so so, until | S¢lling furnit : |in behalf of said company that sald -\ irons, rests, holders, and other neces- | while | bles an iron box perhaps a foot long: width and | h | floor, hold- | just a convenient height | to serve as a foot rest while cleaning | They are oft- | tutional defect, or may be left after| streng and vigorous eught to be used at least once & day. KILT8 ARE COMING. The side plaits that have been so cleverly introduced into the skirts this summer are merely advance egents of the kilted skirt that is coming back. It will not be the all envel ar- rangement of heavy folds, but fall from a fitted yoke around the hips. Already exclusive models are being designated for soft silks that exempli- fy the idea, yet are unobtrusive in the change of style. EMBROIDERED APRONS. Work aprons of white lawn, mull, batiste or other sheer material, fas- inating in shape with simple designs embroidered in satin stitch, are shown at the counters where the stamped ar- ticles are for sale. Some of the aprons have designs in cross stitch that are as pretty as they are simple to do. An apron of this sort is work admirably adapted to the porch, summer after- noons. NOVEL CANDY BOXES. Among the summer novelties in bonbon boxes—and they come in man$ sizes—are those made to repre- sent the watermelon, either cut or in- || tact, the baseball and trunks for the traveler. Cigar boxes in miniature filled with cigars of sweetened choco- late are another novelty. CUT LEATHER WORK, for a college room covers of this kind in the college colors with, perhaps, the college seal, are most fitting. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Not Continental House Furnishing Company. Mr. Editor: While reading The Bul- letin of IKriday, Aug. 16th, I came across an article in regard to some stamp ecanvassers who have been can- vassing the surrounding towns, inelud- ing Danlelson, seiling stamps with the up the required amount, which is half a book, they are to get anything in the line of furniture or dress §oods they desire, But instead as stated when DAVIS! }’:W(\M,«DWA‘( The Big Cut and tooled leather remains in| o . . favor, though It has v.f.»nl popu tor | W+ 5 DRgin SR YO Sanaser CoflfleCtICllt Fflfl' several seas Covers for es or ;‘il‘l;rv:s :;d:“ of u?e Plealher abound; MON——TUB—WED P De Frates Photo-Plays BREED THEATE FEATURE TODAY: For the Sake of the Papoose Magnificent Pathe Western Story " AUDITORIUM August 19, 20, 21 DEWAR’S COMEDY CIRGUS Ponies, and the Wonderful Kicking Mule. the Revolving Tables. STRONG FEATURE PICTURE BILL H GRAND CIRCUIT RACES Charter Oak Park, HARTFORD. September 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 —VAUDEVILLE— Nevine Burt DAY AND NIGHT. Barney Fagin $50,000 in Purses and Herietta Byron Premiums Mammoth Agricultural Exhibits, The Devine Solution Thle;lf:ll‘ief of Lucknow Pathe Weekly No. 31 A h er 12, Half Price.) Excursions om ‘All Rallroads. the customer fills his book half full he gets what the company secs fit to give. Now 1, the representative of the Continental House Furnishing com- which eonducts a business of the v which is paid in stamps, wish to state a article does not refer to us. We do not sell any dress goods of any Kind, as you will see by the name of said com- pany and alse by the advertisement in veur paper every Baturday, and I ap- peal io the customers of the Centi- nental House Furnishing cempany not to be in any fear, as the said article is not meant for us. The Continental Furnishing company is a heuse shing cempany enly, and not hy space where it will 1 remain, thanking you in ad- D M, A. BOTWICK, of Votes for women The last annual report of the treas- urer of the state of Connecticut (to September 30, 1911), discloses that di Some of thes dead women must have possessed sense enough to vote. Doubtless many of them created their estates, and In the other cases, someone must have had confidence in | mental capacity, which capacity proved by the t that they re- tained thelr property. often, and truly, said that it is easier to make money than to keep it. Yet none of the deadl women eould Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S P! b Trolleys Lead To | these prices. WOME in striped ginghams. While th i WOMEN'S $1.00 WASH WAISTS with long eor shert sleeves, all WOMEN'S SEPARATE DRESS 8! ene, linen, repp, ratine and cor med with embroidery and lace. Big Redustions in all Lin | A few drops of this solution Jaquirted into the eyes three times a subjected, estates taxed when dead. whose legacies were depleted tax, and they powerless to effectually remonstrate, and voiceless as to the canoe and Tyler, too the bull moose, Teddy I8 so greedy he would eat up his deer friend, and call for more moose, without having the son even to Wilsen, the time ;and, when it can't get every- thing, it drops a T. R. Turkey may be Thanksgiving we want a piece of the | original moose branded T. R., after the | The Mystery of Man and Woman—I, marriage usnually upon the wife, WOMEN'S AND MISSES' WASH DRESSES—VALUES UP TO §450. Dain lawn and pretty striped gingham which were made to sell for §4.50. They are all handsomely trim- We sell protection for all needs and misfortunes strongest companies. B. P. LEARNED & CO. Thames Loan & Trust Co. Building Agency Established M 1848, ote on the laws to which they though taxed, ilving, were and Think also of the other women, by the isposition of the tax money deducted. A FRIEND, Norwich, August 17, 1812, Bull Moose Roasts. Mr, Editor: The Baltimore American says there are to be bull moose roasts all over the country that will muke the R. H. SNOW High Grade Monumental made to order. Lettering and cleaning on work al- ready erected in cemetery a speclalty. All work as represented. Prices the lowest. 6 Huntington Avenue, ‘Tel. 634-6. ard cider campaign of “Old Tippe- Work * look tame. If ‘Taft, Instead of Roosevelt, were oliteness to offer a plece of the veni- Norwich Tewn. They call the 2 2 IYIMWEF Rep. The Continental House Furnish- gglrlk h.‘g;? 'Ir':gf m.\;l;mfi' ll}:‘e {i\;r:‘: Noroicn Aog 18, 1912, name for the animal, for some say | % F: CONANZ. Il Praskila Stree: she has an appetite that no one can Whitezione $e and the J. e 100 Vatésfor. Women. u}i:(;:—.“ to the “Bull's 1" it is “double | 117 them P T e The deeper he gets in love the more he becomes loves the irresponsible and while the more wiger she is. Love seems too strong a liquor for & crazy eer in November; but for our portion a woman 1,312 estates paid an inheritance tax. | Srigiie 3 fia ; - b g uffin’ has been knocked out of the|man, and a little of it appears to be Of that number 668 were the estates imoose, and the T. R. has been|all he can stand, A Woman, o the s e M b . contrary, like some old topers, grows cleare C. H. TALCOTT: Norwich, Aug. 17, 1912, shrewder, keener eyed and | headed the more sha feels. | " Hence in most couples who are |1oving it is the wife who rules Ax -4 S—— | {hey become more and more cool the authority of the husband rises |~ Further, the mora that lova is phy | sical merely the more the man controls | the woman, and s ooks up to him | and the more spiritual and intellectua love becomes the more the woman is {in the ascendancy. ‘"l This is why the wife is #0 fres and | potent in America; woman {is most IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN In man love is pure emotion; woman love !s a higher order of men- | {4aalized here. tality, | Love to a man is a mystery; he can The instinet of the world is right In | only be happy in & h_v-md'rinx, won ac for the fallure of | dering way; but a woman the more lacing the blame for BUAE gt g 2 max man in love is a sort of wild idiet. | she is about, re she knows The Business Conter of Norwich Ready-to-wear Section THIRD FLOOR This department showss an array of wonderfully tempting bargains in the pretty hot-weather garments for women. at a time when they are wanted most. attractive, and these are fully up to the standard. They will go out in a hurry at All this season’s goods, all seasonable goods, The styles this year have been remarkably S COLORED WASH WAISTS, in solid pink and blue, with gailor collars, and a few Waists ey last SPECIAL 29¢ Pretty Shirt Waists in either high or low neck models and Values up to $1.00. SPECIAL 48c HALF PRICE. Stylish Skirts in white lin- 2.69. All finely tailored. SPECIAL $1.00 Wash FOR 48c. nicely trimmed with lace and embroidery. KIRTS AT LESS THAN deline, which sold at prices ranging up to § Dainty Dresses in sheer SPECIAL $2.95 en Wash Suits, Linen Dust Coats and Mobair Aute Coats it ik el